What In The World

I do not believe that the world can be fully understood. It is incomprehensible to the human mind. However, people have been searching for the meaning of life since the origins of mankind. The question is whether or not any genuine progress has been made. It could be presumed that such progress would result in a universal consensus, yet the world, as we know it, appears more divided than ever. I am not naive enough to think that this is an accident. Rather, I understand that it is the intention of forces unbeknownst to us at work in our society to keep us fighting amongst ourselves, too distracted to think for ourselves.

In 1872, a fraternal organization known as the Bohemian Club was formed. Members ranged from journalists to artists and musicians. They were cultured young men who referred to themselves as “bohemians.” Eventually, membership expanded to businessmen, entrepreneurs, and university presidents. It became less of a club for the artistically talented and more of a club for wealthy and powerful men who enjoyed the arts. As those with greater financial resources took control of the club, it began to include more affluent members. Upon visiting the club in 1882, Oscar Wilde said “I never saw so many well-dressed, well-fed, business-looking Bohemians in my life.” Members have consisted of U.S. Presidents, many cabinet officials, CEOs of large corporations and financial institutions, and senior media executives. Some notable members have been Mark Twain, Herbert Hoover, Jack London, Henry Kissinger, Walter Cronkite, Richard Nixon, Ronald Regan, Charles Schwab, and Clint Eastwood.

Once a year, members of the Bohemian Club congregate at Bohemian Grove, a restricted 2,700-acre campground at 20601 Bohemian Avenue in Monte Rio, California. It is a two-week encampment in mid-July for some of the world’s most prominent figures. A 30-foot concrete owl statue stands at the head of the lake in the Grove and serves as the backdrop for their annual “Cremation of Care” ceremony. “Cremation of Care” is a ritual performed by club members in which an effigy is set on fire, symbolizing the banishment of their conscience. The Club motto is “Weaving Spiders Come Not Here,” implying that business deals and networking are to be left outside, but many important political and business decisions have been made at the Grove.

In September 1942, a meeting was held at the Grove to plan the Manhattan Project which subsequently led to one of the most transformative events in the world to date. At 5:29 a.m. on July 16, 1945, the Trinity Test was performed in White Sands, New Mexico. Part of the Manhattan Project, it was the first detonation of a nuclear weapon, ultimately changing the course of history.

Security agents for the Manhattan Project discovered that jet fuel engineer and chemist Jack Parsons had obtained a chemical used in a top secret project. This resulted in Parsons being subject to an FBI investigation under suspicion of espionage, only to be later acquitted of any wrongdoing. Parsons was a member of Thelema, an esoteric movement founded by mystic, occultist, and ceremonial magician Aleister Crowley. The Agape Lodge was a California-based chapter of the Ordo Templi Orientis which Crowley presided over. Parsons believed in the reality of Thelemic magick as a force that could be explained through quantum physics. After being appointed head of the lodge, the organization was headquartered out of Parson’s mansion in Pasadena, referred to as the Parsonage. Parsons befriended science-fiction writer L. Ron Hubbard who then moved into the Parsonage.

Hubbard and Parsons soon became sexually involved with Parson’s girlfriend, Sara “Betty” Northrup, and collaborated on a sex magic ritual known as “Babalon Working” which was intended to summon an incarnation of the goddess Babalon, also known as Great Mother. Additionally, the Great Mother is one of the famous archetypes discussed by Swiss psychoanalyst Carl Jung.

Between 1913 and 1917, Jung conducted a series of experiments, attempting to confront the products of his unconscious mind by deliberately provoking the hypnagogic state of “threshold consciousness” in which mental phenomena such as hallucinations and lucid dreaming occur. Jung recounts and comments on these experiences in a red leather‐bound folio manuscript called The Red Book. For nearly a century, the book remained unpublished due to a belief that the world was not ready for its content.

Jung theorized that all human beings are born with and share a collection of knowledge and imagery known as the “Collective Unconscious.” The Collective Unconscious is made up of archetypes, patterns of instinctual behavior that result from ancestral experiences. Before Jung’s discovery of the Collective Unconscious, psychology insisted on the personal nature of the psyche, but Jung’s entire life’s work centered around proving a symbiotic connection between the psychological and the supernatural.

The Black Lodge and its opposing counterpart, the White Lodge, originated in ancient legends passed down by the Nez Perce tribe of the Pacific Northwest region. In the stories, the Black Lodge is the shadow self of the White Lodge. It is a place of pure evil which all souls pass through on the way to perfection. During this process, one confronts the Dweller on the Threshold, or their own shadow self, who appears as a doppelgänger. If this challenge is not met with perfect courage, the lodge will utterly annihilate their soul. While the White Lodge can be accessed with strong feelings of love, the Black Lodge opens through fear.

In Aleister Crowley’s 1917 novel Moonchild, a young woman is seduced by a white magician and persuaded into helping him in a magical battle with a black magician and his black lodge. Moonchild was the inspiration for Jack Parsons and L. Ron Hubbard to partake in Babalon Working. Parsons later embarked on sexually based magical operations with prostitutes, as he was intent on performing “the Crossing of the Abyss” to attain union with universal consciousness. After doing this, Parsons recounted an out-of-body experience invoked by Babalon in which he took an oath professing to embody the entity of the Antichrist. Parsons viewed these oaths as the completion of Babalon Working and wrote an occult text titled The Book of AntiChrist. In the book, he prophesied that within nine years Babalon would manifest on Earth and supersede dominance over all the Abrahamic religions.

In 1952, months before Parsons died in an explosion at his home laboratory, the United States Air Force initiated a systematic study of unidentified flying objects under the code name Project Blue Book. This followed Project Sign and Project Grudge of a similar nature. The goals of Project Blue Book were to determine if UFOs were a threat to national security and to scientifically analyze UFO-related data. Thousands of UFO reports were collected, analyzed, and filed. However, following the publication of the Condon Report, recommending the end of government funded UFO research, Project Blue Book was terminated in 1969.

Canadian investigative journalist Serge Monast theorized that there was another even more secret project, Project Blue Beam, a continuation of the Philadelphia Experiment and Montauk Project. Monast believed that there was an alleged plot to facilitate a totalitarian world government by destroying traditional religions and replacing them with a new-age belief system using NASA technology. In 1995, Monast claimed that a Masonic group called “666” had, for twenty years, been gathering the world’s most powerful to establish the New World Order and control the minds of individuals. From 1995 to 1996, Monast said he was being hunted by the police and authorities for involvement in “networks of prohibited information.” After being arrested and spending a night in jail, Monast died of a heart attack in December 1996. Many of his followers have suggested that he was assassinated by “psychotronic weapons” to keep him from continuing his investigations into Project Blue Beam and the New World Order.

In an address to the Bilderberg meeting at Evian, France on May 21, 1992, Henry Kissinger stated “Today Americans would be outraged if U.N. troops entered Los Angeles to restore order; tomorrow they will be grateful. This is especially true if they were told there was an outside threat from beyond, whether real or promulgated, that threatened our very existence. It is then that all people of the world will pledge with world leaders to deliver them from this evil. The one thing every man fears is the unknown. When presented with this scenario, individual rights will be willingly relinquished for the guarantee of their well being granted to them by their world government.” Kissinger served as United States Secretary of State and National Security Advisor under the presidential administrations of Richard Nixon and General Ford, in addition to being a distinguished Bohemian Club member.

In November 1996, principal photography began for director Stanley Kubrick’s final film, Eyes Wide Shut, starring Tom Cruise and wife at the time Nicole Kidman. The film depicts a secret society and illicit sex parties of the wealthy elite. Filming wrapped in June 1998. On March 7, 1999, six days after screening his final cut of Eyes Wide Shut for his family and the stars, Kubrick died of a heart attack. As a result, Kubrick did not get final cut, and 21-25 minutes are rumored to have been removed from the film before its release. Some fans believe that Kubrick was poisoned by Masonic satanists to avoid being exposed by the film.

In February 2001, Cruise filed for divorce from Kidman upon returning to Scientology after removing himself from the Church to work on Eyes Wide Shut. Scientology is a set of beliefs and practices invented by L. Ron Hubbard. Scientologists believe that the true self of a person is a “thetan” – an immortal, omniscient, omnipotent entity that is trapped inside a physical body and has experienced many past lives. Traumatic events experienced by the thetan over its lifetimes have resulted in negative “engrams” being stored in the “reactive mind.” Scientologists claim that a practice called “auditing” can remove these engrams by making a person relive these past experiences. Cruise is close friends with David Miscavige who took over as head of the Church after Hubbard’s death in 1986. Miscavige’s wife, Shelly, was last seen in public in August 2007. She has been missing ever since.

On June 30, 2008, after pleading guilty to state charges of procuring minors for prostitution, American financier Jeffrey Epstein was sentenced to 18 months in prison. Epstein served almost 13 months while on “work release” for 12 hours a day, 6 days a week before being released on July 22, 2009. During his year-long probation that followed, he was allowed numerous trips on his corporate jet to his residences in Manhattan and the U.S. Virgin Islands. In December 2014, Virginia Roberts Giuffre alleged in a sworn affidavit that at age 17 she had been sexually trafficked by Epstein and socialite Ghislaine Maxwell for their own use and for use by several others, including Prince Andrew. Epstein was acquainted with Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, Woody Allen, Harvey Weinstein, Rupert Murdoch, Michael Bloomberg, Richard Branson, Michael Jackson, Alec Baldwin, and the Kennedys. In 2011, just a few years after Epstein’s conviction, Bill Gates started a relationship with him that continued for several years.

Epstein also owned a private Boeing jet that was nicknamed the “Lolita Express,” due to its frequent transportation of underage girls to his private island of Little Saint James (or Little Saint Jeff’s) in the Virgin Islands. In September 2002, Epstein flew Bill Clinton, Kevin Spacey, and Chris Tucker to Africa on this jet. Flight records obtained in 2016 show Clinton flew 27 times to at least a dozen international locations. From the 1990s to mid-2000s, Epstein often socialized with Donald Trump. A video from 1992 surfaced showing the two men partying together at Mar-a-Lago. Trump remarked that Epstein was “a terrific guy. He’s a lot of fun to be with. It is even said that he likes beautiful women as much as I do, and many of them are on the younger side.”

After being arrested again on July 6, 2019, on federal charges for the sex trafficking of minors in Florida and New York, Epstein was detained at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York City. At 6:30 a.m. on August 10, 2019, he was found dead in his cell. Later that day, the Bureau of Prisons and U.S. Attorney General William Barr called the death a suicide, although no such determination had yet been made. Epstein had been taken off suicide watch and placed in a special housing unit. The jail informed the Justice Department that he would have a cellmate and that a guard would look into the cell every 30 minutes, but these procedures were not followed on the night of his death. On August 9, 2019, Epstein’s cellmate was transferred out, but no one took his place. Later in the evening, the two guards who were assigned to check his jail unit fell asleep. They did not check on him for about three hours then falsified related records. Two cameras in front of Epstein’s cell also malfunctioned that night.

Ghislaine Maxwell faced persistent allegations of procuring and sexually trafficking underage girls for Epstein and was arrested by the FBI on July 2, 2020. After being convicted on December 29, 2021, Maxwell was sentenced to 20 years in prison on June 28, 2022, without the list of her rich and powerful clients ever being revealed. In a recent interview from prison, when asked if she thought Epstein had committed suicide, Maxwell said “No, he didn’t. I don’t believe he did. I believe that he was murdered.”

In 1996, Serbian conceptual performance artist Marina Abramović produced a cookbook of “aphrodisiac recipes” called Spirit Cooking. These “recipes” were meant to be “evocative instructions for actions or for thoughts”. In 1997, Abramović created a multimedia Spirit Cooking installation that included white gallery walls with “enigmatically violent recipe instructions” painted in pig’s blood. Spirit Cooking evolved into a form of dinner party entertainment for collectors, donors, and friends of Abramović.

Leading up to the 2016 US presidential election, WikiLeaks published leaked emails between Abramović and John Podesta, the chairman of Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, in which Abramović invited Podesta’s brother to a Spirit Cooking ceremony. “Everything depends on which context you are doing what you are doing,” Abramović has said. Sculptor Nikola Pešić’ claims that Abramović has had a lifelong interest in esotericism and Spiritualism but that this should not be confused with Satanism. Fashion designer Vivienne Westwood, on the other hand, said in an interview with CNBC that Hillary Clinton is, in fact, “evil.” Westwood was a longtime supporter of Australian WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and called for his release from custody.

Spirit Cooking has been associated with theories surrounding adrenochrome, a chemical compound produced by the oxidation of adrenaline. In Terry Gilliam’s 1998 film Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, Johnny Depp’s character takes the drug described by Hunter S. Thompson, in his novel of the same name, as a psychedelic that must be violently extracted from human glands. Infowars founder Alex Jones claims that celebrities and global elites torture children to harvest adrenochrome from their blood.

The censorship and deplatforming of controversial figures like Jones and Assange has only added fuel to the fire of conspiracy theories and led people to believe that their silencing is proof that the government has something to hide. Mass media portrays individuals who question mainstream narratives as dangerous threats to our society, but the lack of transparent information can be just as dangerous as potential misinformation. If we are denied the full truth of a situation, we are unable to make personal decisions for ourselves. This puts the power in the hands of those who, more than likely, do not have our best interest in mind.

Regardless of how much of this you believe, I encourage everyone to do their own research in regard to issues that circulate in the news. Keep in mind that everyone has their own agenda. Media outlets will always put their own spin on things, depending on their politics. Everything presented here is easily researchable, so don’t just take my word for it. Do the research for yourself.